Interview with Trio Zimbalist in I Care If You Listen

Vibrant new ensemble Trio Zimbalist was recently interviewed for I Care If You Listen. Composed of distinguished Curtis alumni Josef Špaček (Violin ’09), Timotheos Gavriilidis-Petrin (Cello ’17), and George Xiaoyuan Fu (Piano ’16), the trio recently released their debut recording Trio Zimbalist: Piano Trios of Weinberg, Auerbach, & Dvořák from Curtis Studio. Distributed by Platoon, the album is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Apple Music Classical.

The trio discusses their album of stirring works by Mieczysław Weinberg, Lera Auerbach, and Antonín Dvořák, and what drew them to program these three selections. They talk about the inspiration to base the project on the “Dumka” and share their favorite piece on the recording and information about their upcoming tour.

For more information about the trio, visit their official website at triozimbalist.com. Learn more about the recording at curtis.edu/TrioZ, and click HERE to watch the official album trailer.

Photos of Trio Zimbalist by Viktor Jelinek.

Merissa Beddows (Voice ’22) Featured on WHYY’s “On Stage at Curtis”

“Curtis has given me something that I will have for my entire lifetime, which is solid technique. It helped me curate my ear and perfect what I’m hearing. Coming out of Curtis, I now have more an ability to be my own teacher than ever before, vocally, but also emotionally in this art form. ” —Merissa Beddows

Season 18 of WHYY’s acclaimed On Stage at Curtis series opens with a portrait of Curtis alumna Merissa Beddows (Voice ’22), who became a viral sensation in 2022 as a contestant on season 17 of America’s Got Talent (AGT). The soprano from Yonkers, New York, delivered spot-on impressions of celebrities like Ariana Grande, Stevie Nicks, and Celine Dion singing “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”

While studying here in Philadelphia, Ms. Beddows performed the roles of Rosina (Il Barbiere di Siviglia), Nora (Riders to the Sea), and Belinda (Dido and Aeneas) with Curtis Opera Theatre, and the roles of Flora (Turn of the Screw) and Luisa (The Fantasticks) with the Chautauqua Institution. A graduate of the Juilliard Pre-College Division in 2016, she studied for two years at the Manhattan School of Music before attending Curtis, where she worked with adjunct faculty member Julia Faulkner. Ms. Beddows has attended the Brevard Music Center and the Chautauqua Institution, and in 2020, was selected as a participant at the Ravinia Festival and the Britten–Pears Young Artist Programme.

In this episode of On Stage at Curtis, Ms. Beddows discusses the mixed blessings of having perfect pitch, the origin of her ability to do impressions, the moment she wanted to be an opera singer after watching Jackie Evancho perform on America’s Got Talent, and embodying an older character as Lady Billows in Benjamin Britten’s opera Albert Herring with Curtis Opera Theatre. She reflects on her triumphs and challenges as a contestant on AGT and talks about writing her own pop songs, creating her own content, and pursuing a path to mainstream commercial success.

Click HERE to watch the On Stage at Curtis episode, or click the video below.

Photos of Ms. Beddows courtesy of Nichole MCH Photography and America’s Got Talent.

Meet the Student: Q&A with Conductor Benoit Gauthier

Benoit Gauthier, from Baie-Comeau, Quebec, entered the Curtis Institute of Music in 2023 and will conduct the Philadelphia premiere of Latin GRAMMY®-nominated composer Gabriela Ortiz’s kaleidoscopic Kauyumari (“The Blue Deer”) on Saturday, January 27, at 3 p.m., in the second Curtis Symphony Orchestra concert of the season, “Beethoven, Ortiz, and Barber.” As a conducting fellow, he works closely with Curtis mentor conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin, music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Metropolitan Opera. All students at Curtis receive merit-based, full-tuition scholarships, and Mr. Gauthier is the Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow.


When did your musical journey begin, and what led you to pursue a career as an orchestral conductor?

I always have been interested in how instruments work, even when I was young. I’ve always wanted to learn as many instruments as I possibly could. At first, it seemed like I was not focusing enough on a main instrument, but today, I can see this post [at Curtis] and say that all of this prepared me to be a conductor. It also helps me to know how to express music in different ways with different instruments.

The piano was always, and still is, the instrument I often turn to and with whom I feel at home. My mom was a piano teacher at home when I was young. She once tried to give me a lesson, but the chemistry between us was horrible for that, so instead, I was always there listening when she was teaching; it trained me to continue learning with a clear goal in my head.

I’m from a little town in the north of Quebec, and there were no professional musicians around me. So, in my mind, it was impossible to become a musician and study music. If I had not done this in my life, I was going to become a healthcare professional. I once had a meeting with a conservatory clarinet teacher, and the next day, my path changed.

You are the founder, conductor, and artistic director of the Orchestre symphonique de la Côte-Nord. What compelled you to create this ensemble, and what have been some of the most memorable projects you’ve brought to life during your tenure with the organization?

When I was 16 years old, I was doing a project for my school, and I decided to ask my friends at the time, musician friends, to perform in a concert. There was no orchestra in this part of Quebec at this moment, so nobody had the chance to play together in an orchestral setting. I asked around to see if they were free to do this one concert. It was a really great opportunity for both musicians and the public to [come together] for this performance, and both asked me to do this again.

At this point, I was leaving the city to study, and I brought my friends from the music school where I was studying. Then, this orchestra began to get bigger and bigger. Today is our twelfth anniversary as an orchestra. Tomorrow there’s a concert, and I’m not the conductor. It’s the first time for that. It’s a weird feeling, too, for me to have someone else lead, but I’m happy about this because now Côte-Nord has its own orchestra, which is something that the people can be proud of. It serves the people and makes life better because they can now enjoy music at home.

I always have been, I think, innocent in the way that I’ve tried to do big projects without really knowing how to do them. Either way, in a way, it all worked out. For the fifth anniversary, we did Carmina Burana, and at this point, the orchestral musicians were not paid. It was still like a community orchestra in a region far away, like an 8-hour drive, from the big cities of Quebec City and Montreal—there were like five orchestra musicians in the city. I asked a lot of people from everywhere to come and perform Carmina. It was a huge orchestra, a huge choir, including a children’s choir. They were just there to have fun and take a trip.

During each summer or autumn, we had been trying to do a smaller project in the community north of our region, the north shore of Quebec, really close to Labrador. There’s no road to go there. You must [travel] by boat or by plane, but it’s still the same region. More than a year ago, we went there for a two-week residency. For the first week, we created a show for children. But by the second week, we were in the children’s school, and the teachers were so enthusiastic that they stopped teaching for a week, and we did artistic activities with them. The children had never had a music lesson in their life. They didn’t know what a double bass was, nor had they ever seen one in their life, and for one week, we did musical activities for the whole day with them. It was an amazing experience for everyone.

Benoit Gauthier conducts the Orchestre symphonique de la Côte-Nord in a performance of the fourth movement of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5, Op. 67.

This month, you are making your Curtis Symphony Orchestra debut, conducting Gabriela Ortiz’s Kauyumari. From the moment you first cracked the score, what have you found to be some of the most interesting and enjoyable aspects of the piece?

So, what is so interesting about this piece is the rhythmic aspect. It’s not really a regular pattern, and the challenge for me is to make it evolve without restraining it. There’s also a strong spiritual aspect in this piece that’s interesting and inspiring for me—a way of thinking about nature and spirituality. There is a certain Mexican tradition where people take some kind of medicinal plant and ask nature to help them on their path. We can hear it in the music in the beginning. It’s really calm, but then it sounds like all the spirit animals or spirits are coming, like a big party or fiesta. It begins slowly and goes faster and faster for the whole piece until the end.

It’s a challenge for the conductor not to start too fast and give more energy to the musicians at certain moments while doing excellent actuation of the music. We have a strong idea of where and how to do it because it’s a big challenge for a conductor. There’s something at the end when this piece ends—I can breathe better. There’s something regenerating about this piece that’s, in a way, like medicine. There’s a release, and I think it will be felt by the audience itself.

What do you hope to glean from your studies at Curtis, working with Maestro Nézet-Séguin?

In the life of a musician, it’s interesting to eventually have this feeling that you can concentrate on the artistry first. From my first day here at Curtis, I can really dig deep into that and focus on my passion, making music. I worked with Yannick for a few years in Montreal [as a member of the Orchestral Conducting Academy of the Orchestre Métropolitain de Montréal under his direction] before coming here to Curtis. Yannick is a big inspiration to me. Because of his great intelligence, he always understands what I want to express musically and knows exactly what I need to improve to get there to convince the musicians in the orchestra.

I have a lot of confidence when I am in front of an orchestra; I can see that when I am working with the [Orchestre symphonique de la Côte-Nord]. But here I’m learning to have strong ideas and be absolutely sure of what I’m thinking and doing up there. I think it’s what I was looking for at this moment in my life. I was also looking to have mentors and be inspired, not only in a gestural and conducting way but also be inspired by life and art.

At the beginning of the year, Jim [James Ross (Conducting ’89)] led the orchestra bootcamp. I learned two days before that I had to conduct the William Tell Overture and the fourth movement of Prokofiev’s Fifth Symphony. I was on the podium and not originally supposed to conduct, but I think because I could present myself to the musicians and the Curtis community so early on, it was a good welcome for me. I’ve had a great experience listening to and working with the musicians here. They are so great.

Another time, a few weeks before Christmas, Yannick gave this master class at Jacobs Music on Chestnut Street. This Curtis student was playing, and I was so inspired. It made me realize how much I can learn by listening to my colleagues. They will be the future generation of professional musicians everywhere. Even if they’re really young, there is something about their artistry that I can learn a lot from.

During the pandemic, there were no musical activities, so I started studying osteopathy. I am three years through my program, which is a five-year program, so I still have two years to do. When I knew I was coming to Curtis, I had to tell my Osteopathic school in Quebec that I was taking two years off. After Curtis, I might go back and finish my diploma in Quebec. Taking care of people has always been a driving force in my life. Osteopathy and conducting are strangely very similar. In the conducting world, we have a lot of opportunities that come, so there’s no point in thinking about that right now because all I have is this moment. There are a lot of things that I find interesting in life. Anything can happen, and I’m not worried because I’m just choosing to do what I love.

Visit Benoit Gauthier’s official website HERE

Interview with Mr. Gauthier by Ryan Scott Lathan.

Curtis Symphony Orchestra
The Jack Wolgin Orchestral Concerts

Beethoven, Ortiz, and Barber
Saturday, January 27 at 3:00 p.m.
Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center; Broad and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia

Michael Stern, conductor (’86)
Benoit Gauthier, Rita E. Hauser Conducting Fellow
Pamela Frank, violin (’89)
Curtis Symphony Orchestra

GABRIELA ORTIZ Kauyumari
SAMUEL BARBER (’34) First Symphony (in One Movement), Op. 9
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 61

Orchestral concerts are supported by the Jack Wolgin Curtis Orchestral Concerts Endowment Fund.

Guest conductor appearances for each Curtis Symphony Orchestra performance are made possible by the Rita E. and Gustave M. Hauser Chair in Conducting Studies.

Click HERE for more information.

Single tickets for “Beethoven, Ortiz, and Barber” start at $19 and are available for purchase at Curtis.edu. The flexible Choose Your Own subscription option offers 25% off ticket prices when purchasing tickets to two or more performances. To order a subscription, visit Curtis.edu/Subscribe, call (215) 893-7902, or email tickets@curtis.edu.

Photos of Benoit Gauthier: 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, & 8.) Courtesy of Isabelle Paradis. 3.) Courtesy of Ludovic Rolland-Marcotte with the Orchestre Métropolitain. 5.) Courtesy of François Trahan.

Hilary Hahn (’99) Wins 2024 Avery Fisher Prize

Internationally acclaimed violinist Hilary Hahn (’99) has been awarded the 2024 Avery Fisher Prize. As a recipient of this prestigious honor, the three-time GRAMMY Award-winning Curtis alumna, who was recently named Musical America’s 2023 Artist of the Year, receives a cash prize of $100,000 for her exceptional artistic achievement and leadership in classical music. Ms. Hahn joins twenty-five previous Prize recipients, including ten Curtis alumni and faculty: Lynn Harrell (Cello ’63), Richard Goode (Piano ’64), Yefim Bronfman (Piano ’77), Pamela Frank (Violin ’89), Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg (Violin ’75), Edgar Meyer, David Shifrin (Clarinet ’71, ’73), Midori, Leila Josefowicz (Violin ’97), and Anthony McGill (Clarinet ’00).

“From the beginning of my career, I saw the Avery Fisher Prize as a high honor: the recipients were people who had already made a historically large impact in our field, yet had the stature, skill, and curiosity to move in any direction,” noted Ms. Hahn. “When I was awarded the Avery Fisher Career Grant in 1995, when I was 15, it felt like a recognition that this could someday be in my future. It encouraged me to push hard to have my voice heard as an artist, to expand my horizons with new projects, and to strive to deepen the artistic meaning of my work.”

She continues: “Having now come full circle, I feel proud of what I have achieved as an artist, and validated that that work has been seen and recognized by my community. But most important, I feel encouraged and inspired to keep forming connections and building community with audiences, composers, and fellow artists around the world.”

Read more about the announcement in the Philadelphia Inquirer, The Strad, and The Violin Channel. Visit Hilary Hahn’s IMG Artists website HERE.

Photos of Ms. Hahn, courtesy of O.J. Slaughter/Decca.

 

Curtis Studio Releases Fourth Recording: “Trio Zimbalist: Piano Trios of Weinberg, Auerbach, & Dvořák”

Learn more about Trio Zimbalist and their debut recording at curtis.edu/TrioZ, and click HERE to watch the official album trailer. Listen to Piano Trios of Weinberg, Auerbach, & Dvořák.

Curtis Studio, the recording label of the Curtis Institute of Music, which is dedicated to discovering new and traditional music and recording performances by inspiring artists of our time, announces its fourth recording: Trio Zimbalist: Piano Trios of Weinberg, Auerbach, & Dvořák. The album consists of three virtuosic works of chamber music performed by distinguished Curtis alumni Josef Špaček, violin; Timotheos Gavriilidis-Petrin, cello; and George Xiaoyuan Fu, piano. It will be available on all major streaming platforms starting on Jan. 12, including Apple Music Classical. It is distributed by Platoon.

Taking its name from Efrem Zimbalist—a famed violin virtuoso and longtime teacher and director of the Curtis Institute of Music — Trio Zimbalist carries on his legacy through its commitment to artistic excellence. The group has garnered critical acclaim for its “precision and feverish intensity” (Greece’s EfSyn) and received praise for its “liveliness and vigor of playing” in performances that were “pure enjoyment!” (Athinorama) at the Nights of Classical Music at the Gennadius Library festival in Athens, where it served as ensemble-in-residence during a 2021 tour of Greece, Germany, and France. Špaček, Gavriilidis-Petrin, and Fu are in demand across Europe and the U.S. as soloists, chamber musicians, and recitalists, forming an inimitable ensemble with repertoire that spans Romantic masterworks to today’s most lauded composers.

This album of piano trios by Mieczysław Weinberg, Lera Auerbach, and Antonín Dvořák is cast in the spirit of the Dumka, containing works composed under the shadows of troubled and traumatic political histories. Dumka is a Ukrainian term that means “thought,” and in classical music it is a type of epic Slavic ballad. Dumky were sung by traveling minstrels, usually Ukrainian, who played some kind of strummed instrument (like the bandura, kobza, or lira). Their songs often contained a thoughtful or melancholic lament of oppressed peoples.

Dvořák used that form as the foundation of his “Dumky” Trio, which was on Trio Zimbalist’s first program and maintains a special place in its repertoire. The work’s significance transcends the passage of time, finding renewed depth as the echoes of ongoing conflicts reverberate through our lives.

The energetic Piano Trio No. 1 by the Soviet-born contemporary composer Lera Auerbach was completed immediately after her defection from the Soviet Union in 1991, while the dramatic Piano Trio in A minor by Mieczysław Weinberg (1919–1996) carries the trauma of a Polish-born composer who lost his entire family in the Holocaust and was later persecuted by the Soviet Union’s regime. Both works are vibrant yet tragic, reflecting the intensity and strength of the creative human spirit in desperate times, and the emotional catharsis involved in telling one’s own story through music.

The program by Trio Zimbalist is a heartfelt response to the enduring human struggle still unfolding today around the world. It encapsulates an unwavering aspiration for a world where peace, freedom, and individualism can flourish. The album follows Curtis Studio’s acclaimed recordings Portraits (Viano Quartet, 2023), Revival (pianist Michelle Cann, 2023), and Scheherazade (Curtis Symphony Orchestra and Osmo Vänskä, 2022).

More about Trio Zimbalist

The members of Trio Zimbalist—violinist Josef Špaček, cellist Timotheos Gavriilidis-Petrin, and pianist George Xiaoyuan Fu — are all distinguished alumni of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. The group draws upon the lineage of previous world-class ensembles formed at Curtis. Its members have studied with faculty representing the Guarneri Quartet, the Beaux Arts Trio, and the Chicago Chamber Musicians. With regular appearances at the La Jolla Music Society, ChamberFest Cleveland, Marlboro, and Moritzburg music festivals, they are active composers, adventurous and multidisciplinary collaborators, and passionate advocates for the impact of music on communities across the globe. For more information about the trio, visit triozimbalist.com.

  • To watch the album trailer, click HERE.

Photos of Trio Zimbalist by Viktor Jelinek.